Hemp VS Trees: One Billion Reasons To Use Hemp Instead

Clear Cutting Pulpwood--One Billion Trees a Year in United States | Source

One Billion Trees

Some hard to hear facts:

In the United States alone, paper companies consume over one billion trees each year and convert it to pulp to make paper. It takes that many trees to provide an average of 735 pounds of paper for each and every person. That number is expected to rise approximately 60% by the year 2050. The United States uses up about 32 % of the world’s paper. In the US, only about 5 % of our once vast virgin forest remain. We are using up our trees faster than we are growing new ones. At that rate, we have to import more trees from other parts of the world forest just to meet the demand.

In the United States paper mills are the third largest energy consumer and the third largest industrial polluter. We pump over 220 million pounds of toxic pollution into the world’s air and water each year.

The pulp and paper industry dumps close to 120 billion tons of CO2 and 3 million tons of chlorine into our waterways which is a major source of carcinogenic dioxins. These poisens are known to be the most toxic materials ever produced. In turn, these cause cancer, liver failure, miscarriages, birth defects and genetic damage. Every woman now has traces of these chemicals and transfer them through breast milk.

And yet, we continue in an ever increasing amount, to continue.

Herbert Hoover and Cohorts | Source

Theory of Illegal Hemp

Theory or Conspiracy, either way, growing hemp became illegal to grow in the early 1930’s. The story goes something like this:

Back in day, during the presidency of Herbert Hoover, there was also two powerful,rich, and influential men, Dupont, of the chemical industry, and Hearst, of the paper and wood industries. Dupont supplied the chemicals needed for Hearst to process his paper. And then, there was a third man, a man that Herbert Hoover created a position for, the Bureau of Narcotics, Harry Anslinger. All three played an important part of what happened next.

Pulp Making Machine | Source

Growing of hemp was already a thriving industry, supplying the byproducts of hemp to make things like rope, and clothing, and a myriad of other products. Then, like has happened so much during the industrial revolution, a new machine was invented, a machine that could process hemp and make it feasible to produce hemp pulp in an economical way and a way to produce paper efficiently without the use of major chemicals or trees. This did not sit well with Dupont or Hearst. And so, Harry Anslinger came into the picture. His job was to eliminate the threat by creating a fear among the people about the dangers of anything hemp related. He did his job well, he created the attitude and laws that made hemp a demon from the very gates of hell. It didn’t take long to quench the possibility of a better, cheaper, paper. Both Dupont and Hearst fared well while America who had just survived the ending of alcohol prohibition, were now faced with this new prohibition. And except for a break in it for for the use of hemp for war purposes, the war on hemp continued, even to this day.

What was taken away by generations before, is now being returned by the generation of today.

New Generations

This new generation, the millennial generation, has got the momentum to drive the legalization of hemp in all fifty states. After all, it's a just fight that will not only benefit this generation, but will provide positive results for generations far into the future. It is time for hemp prohibition to end.

And, besides that, hemp being utilized for paper is an obvious and worthwhile undertaking, it is also good to take a quick look at some of the other benefits.of legalizing the growing of this plant.

Here is a consolidated list of what else hemp can do:

Source

Rope

Clothing

Food

Textiles

Plastics

Insulation

Biofuel

Animal bedding

Mulch

Moisturizing Creams

Cooking Oil

Some Other Points to Ponder about Hemp:

Hemp paper doesn’t need much in the way of chemical processing; it can be bleached and whitened with hydrogen peroxide, which doesn’t poison waterways like chloride and bleach such as used for wood pulp paper. Paper made with hemp, will last hundreds of years and will not decompose and get yellow. Regular paper is lucky if it even last fifty years. Hemp paper can be recycled eight times compared to regular paper which generally can only be recycled about three times. One acre of hemp is the same as four acres of trees.

Companies who are Leading the Way

Four of the best who are leading the way. Be sure to check out each of their websites, they each are loaded with valuable information and product selections.

Colorado Hemp Company (.com)

Green Field Paper Company (,asp)

Hemphasis (.net)

Industrial Hemp (.net)

Get Involved

Join the fight to get hemp legalized and utilized for the good of all. Here are some great starting points.

Vote Hemp (.com)

Freedom Activist (.net)

Alliance of Cannabis Hemp Activists (ACHA (facebook)

Homemade deckle and deckle mold | Source

Making Your own Hemp Paper at Home

The following will give you a good idea on how to make your own hemp paper at home. It is not intended to be a hands-on instruction manual and does not take the place of training with an experienced paper maker, but is a good precursor.

Comments

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hemppapermaker

7 weeks ago

chopping fibers won't work very well for paper.

coleslawYSJ

8 months ago

Some points: this is a home experiment, which will not yield a product comparible to industry standards. You can find an at home recipe, for woodchips, using less chemicals than commercial processing, but again, your yield will not be comparible, to industry standards. Comparing these home recipes, to commercial production, is apples to oranges, and this article is misleading. At the end of the day, commercial hemp production, will still yeild an undesirable amount, of chemical waste. If you want people to get onboard, with hemp pulp, vs traditional wood pulp, talk about sustainability, and saving trees vs misleading your audience, about polution and waste.

Dr. Georgie, MS, ND

13 months ago

Thanks for the great article. I needed more good reason as to the value of growing Hemp for FIBER TO SAVE TREES. Most people are interested in Hemp for CBD, which don't save trees, but just another product to see to humans to make money for themselves. I going off to get my hemp seeds from my state since it now became legal. But , on my island, the people are interested CBD, and I need to connect with processor who convert to fiber. Wonderful, just saw a fashion show in London, ALL VEGAN, so it time to sell HEMP CLOTHING TOO.

Angel Guzman

2 years agofrom Joliet, Illinois

Yes! We need hemp now more than ever!! I'm so glad you wrote this!!!

Larry Rankin

2 years agofrom Oklahoma

It is a readily renewable product. It's a shame it isn't better utilized.

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